The Week’s guide to what’s worth watching

Radcliffe (center) with his fellow Miracle Workers

Studio 54

Even if you were there—at the right time and in the right place—chances are you never got in the door at Studio 54. Matt Tyrnauer’s documentary about New York City’s era-defining nightclub can make you feel like you’ve jumped the velvet rope and are sharing the dance floor with Bianca Jagger, Grace Jones, and other celebrity regulars. Interviews with club co-founder Ian Schrager help tap into the hype and hedonism that fueled the party. Monday, Feb. 11, at 10 p.m., A&E

Miracle Workers

Work is a drag, on earth as it is in heaven. This impressively cast new series aims to take on The Good Place as TV’s top afterlife comedy. Daniel Radcliffe stars as a low-rung angel working in an understaffed section of heaven and tasked with answering an unending onslaught of prayers. Making matters worse, God (a gray-bearded Steve Buscemi), has given up on earth’s problems. Tuesday, Feb. 12, at 10:30 p.m., TBS

Weird City

Get used to seeing Jordan Peele’s name in 2019. Capitalizing on the success of Get Out, the director, producer, writer, and comedy sketch performer is launching a fleet of entertainment enterprises, beginning with this six-part sci-fi comedy series set in a futuristic metropolis called Weird. Each episode will tell a new story, but all play on the tension between a super-elite class and everybody else. With Michael Cera, Rosario Dawson, LeVar Burton, Mark Hamill, and plenty of other great stars. Available for streaming Wednesday, Feb. 13, YouTube Premium

Proven Innocent

Network television hasn’t had a must-watch legal drama since The Good Wife. This upstart could right that wrong if co-stars Rachelle Lefevre and Kelsey Grammer are given enough to work with. Lefevre plays a young criminal defense lawyer who has been determined to fight wrongful convictions in her hometown Chicago since she was an 18-year-old charged in a high-profile murder. Grammer is the powerful veteran prosecutor who once sent her away, and when he isn’t battling her in court, he’s working to prove she never should have walked free. Friday, Feb. 15, at 9 p.m., Fox

The Breaker Upperers

Is everybody in New Zealand funny? Building on the goodwill created by Flight of the Conchords, this feature-length comedy introduces a winning new Kiwi comic duo in Jackie van Beek and Madeleine Sami. The two writer-directors play a pair of jilted women who start a business to help other people terminate romantic relationships mess-free. The co-stars sometime lose the plot, and not every joke lands, but their easy chemistry should keep you smiling. Available for streaming Friday, Feb. 15, Netflix

Other highlights

Conversations With a Killer: The Ted Bundy Tapes

A four-part documentary seeks to understand the notorious serial killer, unwittingly glamorizing and diminishing his crimes. Currently streaming on Netflix

Amazing Pigs

A fascinating look at a remarkable animal with family all over the world. Wednesday, Feb. 13, at 8 p.m., Smithsonian

The Pacific: In the Wake of Captain Cook

Actor Sam Neill retraces the journeys of James Cook, taking his measure with the help of Pacific islanders whose ancestors interacted with the 18th-century explorer. Thursday, Feb. 14, at 10 p.m., Ovation